Wealth Management

Voted #6 on Top 100 Family Business influencer on Wealth, Legacy, Finance and Investments: Jacoline Loewen My Amazon Authors' page Twitter:@ jacolineloewen Linkedin: Jacoline Loewen Profile

April 3, 2011

Try something, rather than do nothing

If they can't catch you, they can't overtake you

"Go fast — really fast. The elephant can't catch a running mouse, but he sure can crush him when the mouse is standing still! When you're small, you got to be faster than the competition. In fact, that's pretty well true no matter who you are these days. So it's better to try something than do nothing," says Robert Herjavec.
The marines did a handbook of strategy which I read back in the nineties and based a great deal of my strategy work around their concepts. The one I debated with many business owners was - make decisions. They may be wrong so make another decision. Those who make the most decisions, win. 
What do you think?





Read more in Money Magnet by J B Loewen

April 2, 2011

Let's face it, Business Owners

There is no balance

"Your business is a living, breathing thing, and it has to survive, be fed and grow. There is no balance in your life when your business is in trouble. If you are under the illusion that you can start a business and run it at your life's schedule, you are mistaken. The business is like a starving puppy — when it needs to eat, then it needs to eat regardless of what you have going on personally," says Robert Herjavec.
Hey, those who want a balanced life, good for you. Even when business is not in trouble, there is no 'balance' in your life. Big highs, big lows, big highs - wash, rinse, repeat...

Read more in Money Magnet by J B Loewen

A Nation of Takers, Not Makers

Today in America there are nearly twice as many people working for the government (22.5 million) than in all of manufacturing (11.5 million). This is an almost exact reversal of the situation in 1960, when there were 15 million workers in manufacturing and 8.7 million collecting a paycheck from the government.
More people in the wagon then pulling the wagon?

Stephen Moore: We've Become a Nation of Takers, Not Makers - WSJ.com

Why the era of top secrecy for the Federal Reserve should end

The US FED is a privately owned bank. It will only disclose what it wants to. 
No-one including the US president will be able to get what info they want out of them. Even the US treasury is run mostly by former Goldman Sachs employees. It's a revolving door. They don't call it Government Goldman for nothing. 
Doesn't matter anyway. All shall be revealed in a few months when QE2 runs out. The FED has become the lender of first and last resort. 70% I'll say again 70% of treasury purchases are coming from the FED. They are in effect printing massive quantities of digital dollars. 
The US is in trouble either way it goes. If QE ends the economy collapses, if they continue, the dollar collapses. The pyramid scheme of money creation is coming to an end.

Ireland still hasn't fixed its broken banking system – Telegraph Blogs

The larger financial system is still a worry.

April 1, 2011

Business is not easy

Being committed to business is hard

"There is a reason so few companies and people make it: It's not easy. Be honest with yourself. What price are you willing to pay to make the business work and be successful? Would you sacrifice your time, your family, your friends, your golf game, your entire social life? I am not advocating that you should, but you have to ask yourself if you are prepared to," says Robert Herjavec.
This is what my business coach says to me all the time. I agree with Robert - it is the struggle of business that is so hard and to be a good entrepreneur, you must develop that tenacity to keep going. Tenacity is the element of entrepreneurism which although DNA can determine this, you can also be trained to deal with stress and bad times to get back to the more profitable situation.

What business awards should be celebrated?

Awards for business are coveted by many but Tom Deans has a problem with CAFE and the way they celebrate the longevity of a family business. Tom thinks that is giving the worst possible message to family businesses. Even worse, Tom says,
"These awards are like stabs through the heart of family business owners"
Here's more of Tom's view:

It’s time for family business organizations to celebrate something more interesting, positive and inclusive and give awards that put multi-generational wealth creation on an equal footing with multi-generational wealth preservation. And if family business institutions don’t want to go down this road then maybe it’s high time that the M&A industry supported its own set of family business awards.
Here’s my list of new awards for everyone to consider.
  1. Liquidity Event of the Year – Inside Sale: Awarded to a business owner who works with his or her children to sell their business inside the family. (I don’t call this multi-generational – I call this a fresh start based on risked capital).
  2. Liquidity Event of the Year – Outside Sale: Awarded to a business owner who works with his or her children to sell their business outside the family.
  3. Redeployment of Family Capital Award: Granted to the family that reinvents itself by helping the next generation pursue businesses they’re really passionate about.
  4. Family Business Philanthropy Award: For the business owner who works with his or her family to use the proceeds of their life’s work to fund extraordinary good works to benefit their community, country and planet.

Read more at Tom Deans Every Family's Business

March 29, 2011

M&A Activity in Canada

Do Canadians fall apart in the mergers and acquisitions space?  Have they missed getting out into foreign business acquisitions too? Not according to information on performance last year:
Canadian Mergers and Acquisition activity increased for the third successive quarter in Q4 with 302 transactions worth approximately $52 billion.  This represents an increase of 12% in the value of deals announced while the number of announcements increased by 9% over the previous quarter.  The Canadian banks and pension funds announced numerous transactions that contributed significantly towards increased cross-border Mergers and Acquisiton activity and a consistent pace of mega deals (deals valued in excess of $1 billion) in the quarter.
 Some interesting aspects of the Q3 results included the following:

  • Four of the five major Canadian banks announced large acquisitions for a total of $14.4 billion; three of the four acquisitions were of foreign businesses.
  • Almost all of the major Canadian pension funds announced transactions for a total of 12 transactions worth $8.8 billion.
  • Bucking a long-term trend, the value of Canadian-led acquisitions abroad exceeded that of foreign-led takeovers by a ratio of 2.5-to-1
  • Activity in the mega-deal segment was unchanged from the previous quarter at 9 transactions; total value of mega deals declined slightly from $28 billion in Q3 to $25 billion in Q4
  • The Real Estate, Oil & Gas and Industrial Products sectors were the key drivers of M&A activity in Q4 representing 59% of the overall transaction volume 

For more Mergers and Acquisitions information, please see our website:  http://www.loewenpartners.com/

March 27, 2011

Entrepreneurial capitalism is the spark behind every important advancement

Did you have a candle lit dinner on Earth Day? I find that gesture just like busy work given for homework, a nice gesture but, hey, let's get doing the real work. I think we should be lighting a candle for every entrepreneur in Canada, not feeling bad that we have power and doing a voluntary black out.
Let's be honest, electricity has been the biggest help to reducing the work load in the home, giving women more time to bring up more educated children. 
I get that Earth Hour is a lovely way to try and raise awareness about being stewards of the Earth, and I am for the idea, but the big dilemma is that electricity is what the whole world aspires to achieve. Doesn't it seem so hypocriticial and contradictory that we turn off what we have for one hour? Being from an African country where power outages were the norm, doing a voluntary power outage seems so...I dont' know...so Paris Hilton.
OK - so what do I suggest instead?
Here is my favourite Greenie talking about the value of electricity, why it is needed and perhaps another way of looking after the Earth without needing to go back to the cave light. He also talks about why 1st world people with our electricity use should not be telling other countries how to be green until we figure it out.



ans_rosling_and_the_magic_washing_machine.html


Hans Rosling says, "Thank you, industrialization," he says. "Thank you, steel mill." "Thank you, chemical processing industry." If you listen closely, you can hear the startled laughter of Hans Rosling's audience. 
Some people think these life-altering inventions -- the washing machine, indoor heating, iPhones, are the result of some kind of magic pixie dust. They happened just because. Little elves. Random events. Fate. Anything but the truth.
Which is: entrepreneurial capitalism is the spark behind every important advancement in human knowledge, and is the single greatest reason why people's lives are getting better.

So, on Earth Day, I did the laundry and gave thanks that I am living in Canada. I also lit a candle for every green entrepreneur and linked up a solar entrepreneur with a Private Equity fund who might keep the cash flowing. That early stage solar company is one of the green sparks, one of the entrepreneurs already making a difference, and I want to do what I can to help those business owners. Wow, it is tough keeping the cash flow going. 
I asked Sarah Thomson, who is running as a Liberal candidate and who is a super entrepreneur and who's Facebook got me on this rant:
Sarah, I hope you will push for entrepreneurs to work on the issues brought up by Earth Day. Nothing wrong with a bit of back to the cave, dinner in the dark, as a nice sentiment, but I think that one hour in darkness on Earth Day gesture has run its course. 
Time to speak up to encourage the entrpreneurs in this country. (Liberals seem to only think corporatism.) Please bring back the focus on small business and not just restaurants and stores, which seemed to be the only type and level of business discussed at the Mayors' debates I heard.
On Earth Day, we should be thanking entrepreneurs and asking for their green sparks. And asking, as Government, how can the government get out of the way?
What do you think?

March 26, 2011

Do you have to be mercenary to survive?

Some South African leaders took advantage of the power they suddenly acquired in the heady days after Mandela's release, as the country moved towards democracy. One religious leader stole from his church and cheated on his wife, a smart TV presenter. She found love again with Adam Kahane who I met in the nineties when I was doing strategy with a fast growing South African bank. Kahane did a superb set of scenarios for the future and the whole country picked up his themes when discussing possible futures and the impact on business.
Now Kahane has published a book on love and power. He certainly saw first hand in South Africa those who used power but without love or respect for their constituents. This balance is something Adam believes is needed in business. Adam works with NGOs and Not for Profits and I know he began in Shell Oil where they did put ethics very high up on their list of values. He manages to articulate this tough balance very well and I recommend his book. Here in Canada, when I think of the senior bank people in TD or RBC, I have certainly seen that blend of patriot more than the mercenary. However, that South African bank where I was working when I met Adam was pure mercenary, and they are now a global bank with a solid bank balance. Their culture has mellowed and I am hosting one of their strategists in a few weeks here in Toronto. They are far from the polite Canadian bank culture but I would place my long term money on the South African, mercenary bank over the nect 30 years.
Here is more on Adam Kahane:

Adam Kahane’s book Power and Love: A Theory and Practice of Social Change(Berrett-Koehler, 2010) opens with a quote from one of Martin Luther King Jr.’s most famous speeches, his last presidential speech to the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. “Power without love,” said King, “is reckless and abusive, and love without power is sentimental and anemic.”
This is a concept that business leaders need to understand, because in times of crisis (and afterward), the people of an enterprise are put under a great deal of stress. Many people in major corporations today are still wondering if they will lose their jobs. A system that follows only the impulses of compassion and solidarity (which Kahane calls love) will lose its competitiveness; a system that follows only the impulses of resolve and purposefulness (which he calls power) will sacrifice its people heedlessly and risk its capability for growth and recovery. A mix of power and love, however, becomes a stance that a leader can hold, and this stance may, in the end, be the single most important factor in enabling a leader to accomplish great things.
 Despite the success of his South African efforts, many participants at Mont Fleur, and in the discussions that followed, found the premise of basing policy on harmony naive. As one African National Congress leader put it, “The only birds that matter here are [not ostriches and flamingoes but] hawks and sparrows!” It turned out that love-oriented solutions are almost impossible to sustain in the predatory atmosphere of any political or competitive power structure. To really make change happen, you need to balance love and power. During the following years, Kahane came to recognize the tension underlying this reality, and to develop some ways to resolve it. That is the basis of the courses he teaches on social change — for example, at the Alia Institute’s annual summer Authentic Leadership in Action program, where he and I are both on the faculty. Kahane sat down with me at last year’s institute, in June 2010 in Halifax, Nova Scotia; he is repeating the course this summer, at the 2011 Alia Institute in Columbus, Ohio.